Lawmakers extend spy bill amid immunity fight

Tue Jan 29, 2008 9:42pm EST
 
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By Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress agreed on Tuesday to extend for 15 days an expiring anti-terror surveillance law, amid a high-stakes battle over whether to grant telephone companies immunity.

On voice votes, the House and the Senate approved the extension and the White House said President George W. Bush would sign it into law.

The Protect America Act, approved by Congress last summer and set to expire on Friday, expanded the power of U.S. authorities to eavesdrop on enemy targets without a court order.

Pending legislation before Congress would tighten controls over the expanded power. It also would grant retroactive immunity from lawsuits to any telecommunication company that participated in Bush's warrantless domestic spying program, begun shortly after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

In agreeing to extend the Protect America Act for 15 days, the White House urged lawmakers to move quickly to send the president a bill that would replace the measure.

"We will accommodate this request so that Congress can live up to its commitment to passing a bill that gives the intelligence community the tools they need to protect the nation," White House spokesman Tony Fratto said.

Congress agreed to the 15-day extension after Bush threatened to veto a proposed 30-day one, telling lawmakers they needed to act quickly for the sake of the nation.

Bush and Republicans have pushed for passage of a bill that would replace a surveillance law, set to expire on Friday, that expanded the power of U.S. authorities last August to track suspected enemy targets without a court order.  Continued...

 

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